America Can Be Better

There’s something profoundly wrong with an economic system that sells homes cheaply then takes them away from young families; that encourages wasteful energy consumption while fuel prices double and ExxonMobil serially breaks corporate profit records ($12bn last quarter). And there’s something immoral about a political order that allows its leaders to invade countries on pretext then fails to hold them accountable; that end-runs international and constitutional principles on torture and incarcerating the innocent while endeavoring to globally spread its values.

The Republican administration in Washington turned surpluses into deficits, peace to war, prosperity into chaos. It failed to address the rising costs of food, health care and college tuition and ignored the decline of public education and the earth’s atmosphere. It let Detroit collapse, and New Orleans drown.

In short, the Republicans that America elected screwed up the country, and it’s time to take it back.

With an abysmal record to run on, the GOP has taken to questioning the patriotism of its opponents, conducting a campaign of innuendo and guilt by association. The irresponsible fear-mongering and demagoguery had predictable results.

When John McCain posed the rhetorical question “Who is Barack Obama?” amidst the worst financial stress of our lifetimes, he riled the lynch mob. Given McCain supporters’ use of Obama’s middle name and the campaign’s exaggeration of his relationship to a ’60s radical, the demonization took its next illogical step.

In the end, McCain was forced to answer his own question and declare that Obama was a decent family guy from whom Americans had nothing to be afraid, but with whom he had differences. If that’s what the election’s about, why didn’t McCain just stick to policy differences in the first place? (The Obama campaign, other than posting an informational video, resisted making a big deal out of McCain’s close friendship with Savings and Loan criminal Charles Keating.)

McCain’s lurching, shambolic campaign and confused messaging—he’s a terrorist, no he’s a family man—is precisely what’s not needed to calm the jangled nerves of consumers, bankers and nuclear wannabes around the planet at this critical juncture.

McCain’s hurried selection of a charming yet unqualified political extremist who abused official powers to settle a family matter exhibited the kind of rush to judgment that created the debacle in Iraq. Keep him away from that nuclear button!

Luckily there’s an alternative in one of the brightest political lights to emerge on the national stage in our lifetimes. Metro chose Barack Obama early on, for his measured intelligence, cool persona and smart embrace of technology.

Sen. Obama’s continuing success in winning over Americans of all colors, religions and economic classes reconfirms our early support for an Obama presidency. His focus on positive themes and inspirational messages display an intuitive flair for leadership. He has run a better campaign, organizing neighborhood teams and making innovative use of modern digital tools. He has a better bench, with an experienced vice president and seasoned advisors. His formidable yet diverse funding base will leave him less beholden to special interests.

His election offers a possibility to turn the page on racial division, Cold War thinking and widening class divides. Though the challenges are greater than ever, the recent wake up calls present an opportunity, with inspired leadership, to finally tackle the health care crisis and achieve alternative energy breakthroughs that will reduce dependence on unstable foreign oil producing nations.

Obama is a unique talent who arrived at a critical moment in history. For America, the choice is clear.

5 Comments

  1. Dan:
    There’s something wrong when….a publisher of a major weekly newspaper writes so poorly and argues in such a shrill manner! We saw the deep corruption of both major parties in the credit ‘crisis’ and their shameful fleecing of taxpayers for the bail out Wall Street and *both* parties’ crummy financial oversight. Barak voted for it just as much as McCain did. Those votes disqualify them for major office immediately—it’s odd (and revealing)that your diatribe doesn’t even mention this huge issue. The third-party debate is this Sunday, i recommend people take a close look at Nader and Libertarians. The Demos and Repubs are outta gas.

  2. So many questions…

    Who the heck is Dan Pulcrano?
    Does he write for Daily Kos? 
    Is Sarah Palin running for president?
    Where is Raj?  Did he get rolled up in the ACORN vote fraud scandal?

  3. Excellent piece, Dan. That will fall through the cracks and make no difference in the long run. For California was counted blue long ago, and our presidential votes are worth less than a non-voting share of Lehman Brothers.

    Candidates don’t campaign here. And neither the grounded, undecided Missouri factory worker nor the dusky Colorado ranch hand give two bits what we think about presidential politics.

    We are but here to watch and wait. John Adams, Thomas Jefferson, and James Madison took your vote from you long before you were born.

  4. Mr. Wurzelbacher was playing football <u>in his front yard with his son</u>, Joey, on Sunday afternoon when Mr. Obama made an unscheduled stop to go door to door greeting voters and asking for their support.

    In his conversation with Mr. Wurzelbacher, Mr. Obama tried to justify his plan tax breaks to 95 percent of Americans and raise taxes on incomes above $250,000.

    Mr. Obama said his plan would improve the economy for other people trying to get a start in small business, and “spread the wealth.”

    http://toledoblade.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20081016/NEWS09/810160418

    What lesson should we, the common, unwashed masses, learn from all this?
    – When the Messiah approaches, prostrate yourself before him. 
    – When the Chosen One speaks, agree quickly and nod silently. 
    – And never dare to question the Messiah, lest ye also be destroyed by the moonbats and the tanning-bed news media.

  5. From the Huffington Post:

    Obama also made light about the messiah complex some of his supporters have built around his candidacy.

    “I was not born in a manger. I was actually born on Krypton. I was sent here by my father Jorel to save the planet Earth… Many of you know that I got my name from my father. “Barack” is Swahili for “That one.” I got my middle name from somebody who obviously didn’t realize I would run for president.”

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